Development of a New Clinical Procedure for Conditioning Aversions to Cigarette Smoking with Perceptually Induced Nausea
Continuum of care for adults with mental illness leaving jail and prison: A review of essential reentry elements
Implementing reentry - Establishing a continuum of care of adult jail and prison releases with mental illness
New York City's system of criminal justice mental health services
Implementing Kendra's Law
Serving mentally ill offenders: Challenges and …, 2002
Aspects of Behavioral Self-control
CONFRONTING ISSUES IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE: LAW ENFORCEMENT AND CRIMINAL OFFENDERS: ARRESTED ADULTS AWAITING ARRAIGNMENT: MENTAL …
Fordham …, 2003
... as passive and emotional, and men as active and analytical, in more recent studies on women&#... more ... as passive and emotional, and men as active and analytical, in more recent studies on women's ...Tonya was taken away from the kids at a time when everybody needed her ... This theory is often referred to as the "chivalry theory" or "judicial paternalism." See Belknap, supra note 26 ...
Human classical aversion conditioning: the pseudo-coriolis effect as a new unconditioned stimulus
Development of a New Clinical Procedure for Conditioning Aversions to Cigarette Smoking with Perceptually Induced Nausea
Affect, conditioning and cognition: Essays on the …, 1985
Effects of client presenting syndromes on client and therapist dominance and affiliation during early sessions of Rational-Emotive psychotherapy
Journal of rational-emotive …, 1994
This is a study of effects of presenting clinical status on interpersonal presentation during ear... more This is a study of effects of presenting clinical status on interpersonal presentation during early Rational-Emotive therapy (RET). Independent variables were intake scores for clients from the axis I scales of the Millon Clinical Multiaxial Inventory (MCMI; Millon, 1983). Dependent variables, from audiotapes of sessions at the Institute for RET (IRET), were Revised Interpersonal Adjective Scale (IAS-R; Wiggins, Trapnell and Phillips, 1988) ratings of clients and therapists. MCMI scales associated with stimulation seeking (N, hypomania; T, drug abuse) were significantly positively correlated with client dominance. Therapist affiliation was negatively correlated with all client MCMI scales, and these were significant for scales that assessed the most severe intake presenting problems (A, anxiety, D, dysthymia).
I~EAF, R. C.. 1). J. WNEK, S. I.AMON AND P. E. GAY. Despite variou~ dru.~,.~, cat~ co,trim: to ki... more I~EAF, R. C.. 1). J. WNEK, S. I.AMON AND P. E. GAY. Despite variou~ dru.~,.~, cat~ co,trim: to kill mice. PHARMAC. BIOCHEM. BEHAV. 9(4) 445~,52. 1978.--Amphetamines (d-at 0.5~ mgjkg; 1-at 2--4 mg/kg) inhibited spontuncous mouse killing by some. but not all cats. Various other drugs (drugs and maximum tested doses were: imipramine, 64 mg/kg; amitriptyline. 32 mg/kg; tranylcypromine. 2 mg;kg: tripelennamine, 4 mg/kg: scopolamine, 1 mg/kg; methyl scopolamine, I mg/kg; chlordiazepoxide 16 mg/kg; diazepam 4 mg/kg; meprobamate, 80 mg/kg; pentobarbital, 16 mg/kg; chlorpromazine, 8 mg~kg; and haloperidol, 0.5 mg/kg) did not reliably inhibit such killing. In contrast with rats, mouse killing by cats was not consistently blocked by antidepressants or amphetamines. When individual cals were inhibited, their reduction of killing seemed related to anorexia rather than to affective arousal.
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